Complex foraging societies like the Tlingit and the Nimpkish tend to have more __________ than most other foraging societies.

A) elaborate folklore
B) social inequality
C) reliance on hunting
D) balanced gender roles


B) social inequality

Anthropology & Archaeology

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What is a phenotypic adaptation, and what makes it possible?

A. It happens when adaptive changes occur during an individual's lifetime. It is made possible by human biological plasticity, our ability to change in response to the environments we encounter as we grow. B. It is a genotypic adaptation that is expressed in the phenotype. It is made possible by the close relationship between our manifest biology and our genes. C. It is a phenotypic adaptation made possible by culture's power over biology. D. It occurs when genetic changes take place during an individual's lifetime. It is made possible by human genetic plasticity, our ability to change in response to the environments we encounter as we grow. E. It is a biological adaptation that occurs during an individual's lifetime and, if critical enough to survival, will actually modify the genotype.

Anthropology & Archaeology

The physical and genetic similarities among the people of the world far outweigh the differences

a. True b. False Indicate whether the statement is true or false

Anthropology & Archaeology

One of the greatest problems with __________ is the inability of anthropologists to know what creators thought about their artistic creations

a. ethnographic studies of art b. ethnographic studies of dance c. archaeological studies of art d. formal art from other cultures

Anthropology & Archaeology

Rapid biological changes in organisms followed by long, relatively static periods during which little biological change occurs is known as:

A. punctuated equilibrium. B. speciation. C. phyletic gradualism. D. allopatric speciation.

Anthropology & Archaeology